(L-R) Sean 'Diddy' Combs and Usher attend the Pre-GRAMMY Gala and GRAMMY Salute to Industry Icons Honoring Sean "Diddy" Combs on January 25, 2020 in Beverly Hills, California. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images Usher weighed in on Sean “Diddy” Combs’ image and influence in an interview earlier this week, claiming the hip-hop mogul has been “misrepresented” following the numerous sexual abuse allegations against him, instead focusing on his impact as an entrepreneur.
“I don’t have anything negative to say about Sean Combs because my experience was not what the world has seen, and how he’s been misrepresented,” Usher said in an interview with Forbes that published last week.
Combs was convicted on prostitution-related charges last year following a sensational, much-covered trial, but he was acquitted on the more serious sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy charges he’d faced. The criminal trial came after singer Cassie Ventura had sued Combs in late 2023 on claims of sexual abuse, which inspired many more alleged victims to come forward with claims of their own.
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Usher and Combs have known each other for decades, and in the Forbes interview, Usher described Combs as a mentor who taught him about the music industry and said he paved the way for other artist-entrepreneurs who came after him.
“I’m not saying that every man has perfect, I’m not saying all of us don’t have flaws,” Usher said. “But I can’t with any sense of humanity not recognize the valuable contributions this man made for us as black entrepreneurs, for us as businessmen, for us as people who transition culture and ideas into something that’s tangible and becomes business. So many people benefited from what he created, and I acknowledge that.”
With the prostitution charges being the lone conviction, Combs was sentenced in October to over four years in prison, and he’s currently appealing the sentence. Earlier this month, Combs shaved six weeks off his sentence after entering a stint in rehab last year after the conviction.
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